CELLULAR SYSTEM.
The invention relates to cellular network sys¬ tems according to the preambles of the attached claims 1, 6 and 11. The cellular network systems ac¬ cording to the invention may conform to the GSM sys¬ tem known per se, for instance.
New requirements arise when mobile phone ser¬ vices are offered in urban population centres: the system is supposed to have a large capacity, base station equipment should be small-sized because of the very limited possibilities of providing equipment rooms in urban areas, and the system should operate on low radio power levels to make small-sized sub- scriber's units possible. Moreover, the system is expected to cover also the interior of buildings and to offer a good coverage in spite of the fact that it is difficult to predict the radio coverage of anten¬ nas to be positioned at low elevations. In addition to the above, the system is supposed to offer an easier frequency planning of a radio network than before. Such cellular networks are built of so-called short-range microcells.
To build a mobile phone network in an environ- ment as described above is a task very different from realizing a classic cellular network. While the pri¬ mary object of a cellular network is to minimize the number of base station sites by increasing the range of the cells to the technical maximum and by instal- ling the maximum number of transceiver units permit¬ ted by the frequency band of the network on each base station site, the primary object of microcellular networks is to achieve low radio powers and small in¬ stallation units suitable for outdoor deployment. However, conventional cellular technique (cell
splitting) does not meet the requirements of a micro- cellular network. This is due to the fact that with the cell radius decreasing and the radio coverage at the same time becoming more difficult to predict than before (because antennas are positioned below roof¬ tops to restrict the cell size) either the overlap¬ ping of the cells increases or the coverage of the system is compromised (depending on a shadowing caus¬ ed by buildings or natural obstacles in each direc- tion). An increasing degree of overlapping of the cells makes it necessary to widen the reuse pattern, which eliminates at least part of the additional ca¬ pacity supposed to be obtained by means of cell splitting. The object of the present invention is thus to provide a digital TDMA/FDMA (Time Division Multiple Access/Frequency Division Multiple Access) cellular network system, e.g. a TDMA/FDMA cellular system ac¬ cording to the GSM system, in order to comply with the above requirements for a microcellular network. This is achieved by means of a cellular network sys¬ tem according to the present invention, the first embodiment of which is characterized in what is set forth in the characterizing portion of the attached claim 1, the second embodiment of which is charac¬ terized in what is set forth in the characterizing portion of the attached claim 6 and the third embodi¬ ment of which is characterized in what is set forth in the characterizing portion of claim 11. The basic idea of the invention is to give up the classic cell planning, according to which a part (particular frequencies) of a frequency band avail¬ able is allocated to each cell, and to utilize in¬ stead (within the scope of the restrictions placed by the other properties of the system) substantially the
full available frequency band in as many cells as possible, preferably in all cells of the system.
The difference between the idea of the inven¬ tion and that of the prior art may be described more accurately as follows. Conventional cell planning tries to find the densest reuse pattern, by means of which a limited available frequency band can be ef¬ fectively utilized (the denser the reuse pattern, the greater the capacity). This takes place in such a way that the number (K) of the coverage areas (cells or sectors) of a reuse pattern is first derived from the minimum required for C/I (carrier-to-interference ratio) of the system (GSM system requires 9 dB, for instance). The available frequency band is then di- vided evenly among the coverage areas. The basis for the present invention is a very different idea: cell planning is simplified by choosing the number (K) of the coverage areas of the reuse pattern to equal with the number of available carriers on the frequency band. The capacity of the system is then increased by adding frequency hopping transceivers, each of which is hopping across the whole width of the frequency band. The collision probability can thus be spread over the whole area of the reuse pattern. The solution of the invention also enables the considerable advantage that the frequency hopping sequences to be used in different cells need not be mutually synchronized, which means that there is no need to time synchronize the cells, i.e. TDMA frames need not be transmitted synchronously and at the same mutual timing. On the other hand, the invention makes it possible to utilize also the time synchronization between cells for a selective reduction of collision load on control channels, as is described in greater detail later.
In the present invention, the known frequency- hopping property of the known GSM system is thus uti¬ lized in a novel way, in other words in such a way that substantially the whole frequency band of the system is included in the hopping sequences of the cells. A frequency-hopping chain of all cells then includes the same frequencies, i.e. all frequencies of the system (with certain exceptions due to the other properties of the system) . According to the frequency-hopping principle, the transmission frequency is changed throughout the transmission of a signal and the receiving frequency during reception, respectively, by using a suitable number of frequencies, e.g. four predetermined fre- quencies. These frequencies form a so-called hopping sequence. Within one cell, the hopping sequences are mutually synchronized (collisions do not occur be¬ tween the channels of any one single cell) and non- correlated among cells sharing the same allocated frequencies. In the GSM system, frequency hopping is an optional feature for a base station and an obliga¬ tory one for a mobile station.
Two kinds of advantages are gained from the use of frequency-hopping, namely so-called frequency and interference diversity effects. The desirable effect of frequency diversity is based on the fact that fad¬ ing conditions are mutually uncorrelated across con¬ sequent time slot occurencies, when the frequency of a radio connection is changed sufficiently from one time slot to another. Even stationary (or slowly mov¬ ing) users, which for a certain frequency are in a fading notch, are then regularly also in a strong field on some other carriers belonging to the hopping sequence. On the other hand, the useful effect of interference diversity is caused by the mutual uncor-
relatedness of the hopping sequences, i.e. by the fact that the frequency-hopping sequences of the base stations using the same or nearby frequencies are mutually different, whereby connections interfering each other change when moving from one time slot to another. In this way, the influence of strong inter¬ ference 'sources is averaged over several channels. The radio system and frequency-hopping of the GSM system are described in greater detail in the reference [1] cited (the list of references cited is at the end of the specification).
Thanks to the solution of the present inven¬ tion, the benefit from interference diversity can be exploited to its full potential. Because the system of the invention reuses substantially all frequencies preferably in all cells, an increasing degree of overlapping of the cells in a denser becoming cellu¬ lar network does not make it necessary to relax the reuse pattern (because the interference is only mo- mentary), which brings a distinct advantage of capa¬ city compared to conventional solutions.
In the following, the invention and its prefer¬ red embodiments will be described in greater detail referring to the examples according to the attached drawings illustrating a GSM network, in which
Figure 1 shows schematically one cell of a cel¬ lular network system,
Figure 2 shows schematically a reuse of fre¬ quencies in a case known per se, in which a cellular structure consists of a reuse pattern of 9 cells,
Figure 3 shows schematically an allocation of BCCH/CCCH frequencies in the cellular network system according to the invention,
Figure 4 shows schematically frequencies used in one cell of the cellular network system according
to a first embodiment of the invention in a time slot corresponding to a BCCH/CCCH time slot,
Figure 5 shows schematically frequencies used in one cell of the cellular network system according to the first embodiment of the invention in the other time slots of a TDMA frame and
Figure 6 shows schematically frequencies used in one cell of the cellular network system according to a second embodiment of the invention. Figure 1 illustrates a cellular network system within the area of one radio cell. A base station 11 forms a radio cell of its own and serves subscribers 12 moving in the area of this cell and being in con¬ nection with their base station via a radio path. The base station comprises at least two, in this case four transceiver units, which are indicated by refer¬ ence marks TRX1...TRX4. The outputs of the transmit¬ ters are connected to a combining element 13 at radio frequency, which element connects the transmitters of the transceivers to a common transmitting antenna 14 and the receivers of the transceivers to a common re¬ ceiving antenna 15. The combining element 13 is a wideband combiner suitable for being used in associa¬ tion with frequency-hopping transceivers. Because of the losses of a wideband combiner, the number of transceivers to be connected to the same antenna is limited.
The base station further comprises several baseband signal processing units 16a to 16d, which produce baseband modulating signals for the trans¬ ceiver units TRXl... RX4. In the signal processing units, the data to be transmitted is coded and posi¬ tioned into a frame structure. Between the signal processing units and the transmitters, there is a switching field 17 connecting the baseband signals, to
be transmitted to the transmitters and the signals to be received to the signal processing units, respec¬ tively.
One of the transceiver units of the base sta- tion (in this case the transceiver unit TRXl ) trans¬ mits on a BCCH/CCCH channel. The transmission fre¬ quency (BCCH/CCCH frequency) of this transceiver unit, is fixed in each cell. The BCCH/CCCH channel will be described more closely below. Because the number of transceivers to be equip¬ ped for the cells of the system is smaller than the number of the channels of the system, hopping synthe- tizers shall be used in the transceivers of the cel¬ lular network system according to the invention. The cellular network naturally comprises also other components, but because the basic structure of the network is known per se, it will not be described more closely in this connection. As to the basic structure of a GSM network, reference is made e.g. to the reference [2] cited.
In Figure 2, the cellular network system is shown as a combination of ideal hexagons, each of which represents one cell 10. According to conven¬ tional frequency planning, hexagons are formed in a known manner to reuse patterns, to so-called clus¬ ters, which clusters 20 typically comprise e.g. 9 cells, as shown in Figure 2. Frequencies available are divided among the cells of a cluster and respec¬ tive frequencies are reused again in the respective cells of the next cluster. In Figure 2, the frequency combination of each cell is indicated by reference marks A to I. For instance, on a 12,5 MHz band with 62 available carrier frequencies, the difference be¬ tween the carriers being 200 kHz, six or seven fre- quencies are allocated to each cell from said fre-
quency band.
One of the control channels of the GSM system is a Broadcast Control CHannel BCCH, which is a uni¬ directional channel from the base station to the mo- bile stations. Another control channel of the GSM system is a Common Control CHannel CCCH, which is used for establishing a signalling connection only. The BCCH and CCCH channels occurring at the same car¬ rier frequency share one time slot in a multiframe structure of 51 frames. A BCCH/CCCH carrier consists of a TDMA frame of 8 time slots. One of the time slots is used commonly by the BCCH and CCCH channels (as well as by a frequency correction channel FCH and a synchronizing channel SCH) (51 multiframe). The other time slots of the BCCH/CCCH carrier may be traffic channels.
Even though a power control as per channel (as per time slot) is known in the GSM system, the BCCH/ CCCH carrier must transmit at maximum power in all time slots, because the mobile stations monitor the surrounding cells after having read the frequencies of the neighbouring cells from their active cell. A mobile station can measure the level of the neigh¬ bouring cells only momentarily, due to which there is no guarantee that the measurement occurs exactly in the time slot comprising the BCCH/CCCH channel. For this reason, the cell must transmit this frequency in all time slots at fixed (maximum) power. The mobile station utilizes these measuring data in order to conclude, whether the field strength of some other cell is so much stronger that it is worth while aban¬ doning the present cell and beginning to listen to the call channel of a new cell. A similar monitoring controls a handover process, when the mobile station is in an active state, in other words, in the case of
a call.
Because one time slot (BCCH/CCCH time slot) of the BCCH/CCCH carrier is shared (within the scope of the multiframe structure) also by other control chan- nels (frequency correction channel FCH and synchro¬ nizing channel SCH), the references to the BCCH or CCCH channels shall be understood to concern gener¬ ally also other control channels of a similar type (common in a cell). (These control channels are de- scribed in greater detail e.g. in the above-mentioned reference [1] cited. )
Consequently, each cell 10 of the GSM system comprises a transmitter (such as a beacon) at a fixed frequency and with a permanently constant power, on the basis of which the mobile stations can, for in¬ stance, decide to which of the available cells they stick in an idle state. On grounds of the measure¬ ments of the neighbouring cells, the system makes a decision on a handover of a mobile station in a call state. Consequently, no hopping synthetizer can be used at the BCCH/CCCH frequency of a cell (whereby the BCCH/CCCH channel could be seen only at intervals at the frequency allocated to said cell) .
On account of the described properties of the GSM system, the main principle of the present inven¬ tion (the transceivers use frequency hopping in such a way that substantially all frequencies of an avail¬ able requency band belong to the hopping sequences) has been varied in such a manner that conventional frequency planning is applied to the BCCH/CCCH fre¬ quencies of the cells, which means that the control carrier has a predetermined fixed frequency in each cell. Differing from the conventional frequency plan¬ ning, the system according to the invention does not, however, require the. maximum capacity of the cluster
to be reused (because only one BCCH/CCCH frequency is allocated to each cell), and therefore, the cluster size can be preferably the same as the number of ra¬ dio frequencies available in the system. Consequent- ly, on a 12,5 MHz band, for instance, the size of the cluster can be 62 cells, if the difference between the carriers is 200 kHz. Frequency planning can be very much simplified by such a large cluster size, in spite of the irregular radio coverage of the cells. Figure 3 shows schematically the allocation of the BCCH/CCCH frequencies in a case similar to that described above, in which the cluster size is 62 cells. The cells of the cluster are indicated by ref¬ erence marks Cl to C62. The BCCH/CCCH frequency of the cell Cl is fl, the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the cell C2 is f2, etc., and the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the last cell C62 is f62.
As mentioned above, the frequency of the BCCH/ CCCH channel cannot hop, but the transmitter in ques- tion transmits at a fixed frequency and at constant power in all time slots of a TDMA frame. Respective¬ ly, in order to protect the BCCH/CCCH channel from other frequencies hopping according to the invention, the BCCH/CCCH frequency cannot be present on the fre- quency hopping sequences of the other radio channels of the same cell in the time slot corresponding to the BCCH/CCCH time slot of said other radio channels.
Figures 4 and 5 show this principle schemati¬ cally. Figure 4 shows frequencies used by all other transmitters of one cell, in this example case C46, except by the BCCH/CCCH transmitter (transceiver units TRX2 to TRX4 in Figure 1) , in a time slot TSO corresponding to the BCCH/CCCH time slot and being the first time slot' of a TDMA frame 40. As presented
above, the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the cell C46 is f46, and each other transceiver unit has the frequen¬ cies fl to f45 and f47 to f62 at its disposal in the time slot TSO corresponding to the BCCH/CCCH time slot. Consequently, generalized for all cells, this means that the transceivers, except the transmitter operating on the control carrier (BCCH/CCCH), use frequency hopping in the cells of the network in such a way that substantially all frequencies of the available frequency band belong to the hopping se¬ quences, except the frequency of the control carrier of the own cell in the time slot corresponding to the control channel.
According to Figure 5, respectively, each transmitter of the cell C46, except the BCCH/CCCH transmitter, has all the frequencies fl to f62 at its disposal in all those time slots of the TDMA frame 40 which do not correspond to the BCCH/CCCH time slot (TSN, N O). Generalized for all cells, each trans- ceiver unit of each cell, except the BCCH/CCCH trans¬ mitter, has all the frequencies at its disposal in these time slots. Consequently, each one of these transmitter units transmits 1/62 of the transmission time of each channel at a certain individual trans- mission frequency.
In one embodiment of the invention, the other time slots (7 in number) of the BCCH/CCCH carrier, which time slots may be traffic channels, remain at the same fixed frequency and only channels at other frequencies hop as described above. In a second em¬ bodiment, said traffic channel time slots of the BCCH/CCCH carrier hop between the BCCH/CCCH transmit¬ ter operating at a fixed frequency and the other (hopping) transmitters of the cell in accordance with a local hopping sequence of the cell to be realized
in a baseband switching field 17 (Figure 1) , for in¬ stance. The switching field 17 connects said channels frame by frame to different transceiver units. In this last-mentioned embodiment, in which all channels are treated equally, irrespective of whether they be¬ long to a fixed frequency BCCH/CCCH transceiver unit or to other transceiver units, the interference di¬ versity to be obtained from frequency hopping can be preferably maximized. In case if the other time slots (7 in number) on the BCCH/CCCH carrier remain at the same fixed frequency, they are exposed to interference from (hopping) frequencies of the other transceiver units. In the above embodiment, -the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the own cell has been eliminated from the frequency hopping sequences only in the time slot corresponding to the BCCH/CCCH time slot. This is caused, on the one hand, by the fact that the control channel (BCCH/ CCCH channel) is considered to be more critical as far interference is concerned than an ordinary traf¬ fic channel and, on the other hand, by the fact that said interference is only momentary. However, the momentary interference caused by the (hopping) fre¬ quencies of the other transceivers to the other chan- nels on the BCCH/CCCH carrier can be entirely elimi¬ nated by excluding the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the own cell from the frequency hopping sequences in all time slots (TS0...TS7). This causes, however, a slightly greater loss of capacity, respectively. The last-men- tioned alternative is shown in Figure 6, as far as the cell C46 is concerned.
Moreover, it shall be noted that the above em¬ bodiments are such that there is no need to time syn¬ chronize the cells with each other. Moreover, the principle of the invention leads
to the fact that the other cells of the system use the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the interfered cell also in the BCCH/CCCH time slot and thus interfere the BCCH/CCCH channel of this cell. However, a conse- quence of the natural topology of the network is that the most cells are too far away in order to cause any significant interference. Transmitters of each cell spend 1/62 of the transmission time at the BCCH/CCCH frequency of said interfered cell. It depends on the equipped capacity of the cells and on the prevailing traffic situation, whether the interference level of the BCCH/CCCH channel rises too high.
However, interference tolerance of the BCCH/ CCCH channel is improved by the fact that the maximum power of the cell is used on the BCCH/CCCH channel under all circumstances. The other users hopping at the same frequency operate in most cases on a lower power level controlled by power control. Due to this, it is highly probable that the BCCH/CCCH channel copes with collisions without an unreasonable in¬ crease of the error ratio. On the other hand, a suf¬ ficient amount of frequency resources are placed at the other users ' disposal from other frequencies (at which the peak power BCCH/CCCH carrier is topologi- cally farther away), from a more equal situation of competition, so that these users will be able to maintain a sufficient quality of a radio connection.
However, if the interference level of the BCCH/ CCCH channel rises too high, in spite of the topolo- gical distance mentioned above and differences in the power level, the principle of the invention can be applied in such a way that traffic channels corre¬ sponding to the BCCH/CCCH time slot are blocked from being used by the other (hopping) radio channels of the network. In other words, the system does not con-
nect a call to a time slot corresponding to the BCCH/ CCCH time slot in cells surrounding the cell which suffers from excessive interference on the BCCH/CCCH channel. In this way, it is possible to reduce selec- tively the intensity of collisions occurring on the BCCH/CCCH channels so that channel coding and inter¬ leaving of the system yield a sufficiently low error ratio. This procedure naturally reduces the capacity of the system of the invention, but the reduction is restricted to concern only certain cells and exclu¬ sively the BCCH/CCCH time slot (TSO) . The last-men¬ tioned embodiment can be varied in principle also in such a manner that only the BCCH/CCCH frequency of the own cell and the frequency or frequencies corre- sponding to the BCCH/CCCH frequency of one or several other (interfered) cells are eliminated from the fre¬ quency hopping sequences in a time slot corresponding to the BCCH/CCCH time slot. In the two last-mentioned embodiments, the cells shall be mutually time syn- chronized in such a way that the TDMA frames are transmitted synchronously and at the same mutual timing.
Though the invention has been described above referring to the example of the attached drawing, it is obvious that the invention is not restricted to that, but it can be modified in many ways within the scope of the inventive idea presented above and in the attached claims.
List of References cited:
[1] Recommendation GSM 05.01 "Physical Layer on the radio path: General description. "
[2] Recommendation GSM 01.02 "General Descrip- tion of a GSM PLMN" .